Topic: Ask Republicans about jobs, they’ll answer about Obamacare
msharmony's photo
Sun 10/16/11 03:43 PM






It’s really sad to me that a Canadian knows more about American economy and politics than most Americas. BTW...that is not a slight to anyone debating our Canadian friend in this thread, but was aimed at American citizens in general.

That being said, I’m not here to engage in the debate going on here, but just to make a general comment on the topic of the relation of jobs and Obamacare.

I’m in the same boat as most middle class, small business owners right now…maybe more so because I’m engaged in a business that is not as necessary as other services these days. Everyone on my staff has taken pay cuts over the last couple of years to ensure that none of our workers jobs are cut.

We already pay as much as $40 in liability and workman’s comp insurance per $100 in salary on our workforce. My accountant and I have crunched the numbers 20 different ways, but the bottom line of each spells the same failure…if I have to provide health insurance or pay fines for being unable, there will be 31 more people looking for jobs…32 including myself. I am not independently wealthy, so there is not a thing I'll be able to do about it.

As far as I can see, Herman Cain is the only one really giving much attention to the issues facing small businesses. People seem to forget that small businesses are an important part of our economy and could be a ready resource toward the creation of jobs. Forget about us and we will simply be swallowed up or fade away.





thats the divide in american politics, there are 'groups' which all feel a candidate represents them,, but few candidates represent all groups

I have a friend who is a business oner and he would disagree that health insurance causes him any problem whatsoever

I also dont see any 'small business' connections to herman cain

or evidence that our canadian friend is so terribly informed about the american economy or politics


I'm not promoting Herman Cain, I only said that there is only one I've heard address the issues with small businesses and how important they are in our ecomony...it just happened to be Herman Cain. This is how little small businesses are being thought of in this economy or as having a role in possible solutions.

If you are interested in seeing a video of what Herman Cain has to say about small businesses, I can try to find it...but like I said...not promoting him and don't necessarily believe he has any real answers.

Your friend is obviously in a business where he is not mandated to pay $40 on the $100 for insurance already. And he is probably not in the only business catagory that is going to be required to carry health insurance for as few as 5 employees.

For someone who hates big corporations so much due to their greed, an oportunistic ways,I'm a little surprised you are not a little more sympathetic to the smaller businesses who are not driven by greed, and care individually about their employees. I'm surprised to get such a cool reply from you of all people.





I dont hate corporation, I do hate greed and opportunism

I am sympathetic to small business, I just dont necessarily believe healthcare reform will cause them such hardship


So which part don't you believe...that there are labor contractors who already have to pay $40 on the $100 in mandated insurance already, or that labor contractors are going to be required to carry health insurance on 5 employees or more.

Or is it that you don't believe that the combination of the two will can put a business out of business?



the part where either of those things stem from healthcare reform

DeusImperator's photo
Sun 10/16/11 04:12 PM
The only real and lasting solution to the economic situation in the US is to cut corporate taxes down to at LEAST a global median level, promote business friendly policies and institute a flat (or flatter) tax and cut capital gains down to zero. Complaining that businesses are unpatriotic for relocating or moving production overseas just compounds the anti-capitalistic atmosphere detrimental to a healthy economy. Money and capital are liquid. Money and capital move to wherever it welcomed. Likewise, creating an anti-business atmosphere drives out business. I personally believe that capital gain taxes should be cut to zero as the corporation has already paid taxes on the profit earned. Any capital gain that is accrued is actually taxed twice in reality.

Next, not only deregulate industry but reduce regulations which binding corporations and businesses. Make it easier for business to relocate. Enact right to work legislation in each of the states. Repeal Obamacare and reform Medicare (which is another looming crisis looming on the horizon which is going to be an issue as the babyboomers age).

What you will see is money and capital move slowly back into the United States. We saw this same phenomena in Europe during the 1980s. As continental Europe pursued social democratic policies money moved to the UK (Thatcher) and the US (Reagan).

Next cut the public workforce by a 20% of its current level and place a hiring freeze for a 4 year period which should drop the non-military and non-essential public work force down to about 25% of its current level. Remember every public worker is a net drain on the economy because every cent comes out of the pocket of someone in the private workforce or corporations. Governments do not create jobs but can create an environment where jobs can be created by the private sector. Privatize whatever services that can be privatized without creating a monopoly. Reduce the wage rate of public workers, if they are good enough they can seek employment in the private sector. The lower public sector wages is an indication that the government should not compete detrimentally with the private sector which is the engine which creates real jobs which drive the economy.

Reduce federal unemployment benefits to 6 months and reduce welfare payments (not to save money per se) but to reduce dependence on government largess (meaning other people's money) and vote buying.

However, due to ideological reasons and loud mouthed special interest groups (squeaky wheel getting the grease) there is little political motivation to institute such reforms.


msharmony's photo
Sun 10/16/11 04:30 PM
Edited by msharmony on Sun 10/16/11 04:32 PM
I will merely supply some definitions for readers to make up their own minds

Capital gains - the increase in value of an asset (as stock or real estate) between the time it is bought and the time it is sold


Reform- to put or change into an improved form or condition


welfare reform was enacted under President Clinton, it reduced payments by putting time limits on how long welfare could be received AND the conditions by which they can be received (Which included work activities)

there is also a capital gains tax phenomena in AMerican history which can be read about here

http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-capgainsspur.htm

KerryO's photo
Sun 10/16/11 05:34 PM

QUOTE:
perhaps stick to canadian politics?

there is no 'vote' for a 'communist party', no communist party candidates, no registration or place on our ballots for communist party either,,,

and

what do eugenists have to do with the Communist Party of America?


I love the "stick to Canadian Politics" part... That would work IF your George Soros and the boost B0 crowd did not interfere in ours. But then again I would have every right to "interfere" since I moved here as a teenager from the US.

http://www.torontosun.com/news/canada/2010/09/01/15216861.html

You seem so good at copying and pasting that you should be able to track down your closest chapter of the CPUS from their website which I see you have visited or just perhaps contact one of your fellow travelers about their community organization.

Now on to the eugenics part...

A close and personal friend of mine who happened to be Al Gore's manager in San Francisco in 1992 relate this incident. Al Gore speaking a black gathering with the usual bombast explained to the black folk that Al Sr. championed civil right and lost his senate seat for voting for the CRA of 1964. All the black folk gave Hot Air Al a standing O for it. The reality is that Al was one of the senators who voted against the CRA 1964 and other major civil rights legislation. The audience was obviously made up of a bunch of imbeciles and morons.

Now to bring this together... You said
QUOTE:

Founded in 1919, the Communist Party of the United States of America has championed the struggles for democracy, labor rights, women’s equality, racial justice and peace for ninety years. The Communist Party has an unparalleled history in the progressive movement of the United States, from the struggle against Jim Crow segregation, the organizing of the industrial unions, from the canneries of California, to the sweatshops of New York City.
which was a copy and paste hack job from the Communist Party's website located at http://www.cpusa.org/communist-party-usa

to which I replied
QUOTE:

Oh I forgot the progressive movement... listing quotes from the progressive movement


Do you get it?


Frankly, I don't. This is getting totally incoherrent.


Yeah, he lost all credibility with me when he started the name-calling, personal attacks on peoples' intelligence and breaking Godwin's Law by making Hitler comparisons. He's just a Canadian Ann Coulter as far as I'm concerned-- all bluster and no facts. Not to mention disrespectful, a pretty crappy payback to we U.S. taxpayers who keep the REAL commies off his back with OUR tax money and blood while his country makes a killing on the oil that runs OUR expensive, superpower-class military.

Nothing he says here much matters because he can't vote against Obama and I doubt he's winning over any people who _can_ with these antics and a handle that translates from the Latin as 'God Emperor'.

Let's just put him on ignore, let him go back to his soapbox in Canada and play Deus Ex Machina with a Parker Bros Monopoly game. I doubt they listen to him there, either.

-Kerry O.


KerryO's photo
Sun 10/16/11 05:48 PM

what is a mensan kerry?....lol




Only that he belongs to MENSA, a society of so-called geniuses with IQs higher than 130. Like any other group, it has its overbearing, arrogant narcissists, but many of the people are really quite humble. I'd bet that Abra is another, and you know him pretty well. Abra is obviously a LOT smarter than us, 'cause you won't catch him dead in this forum, LOL!!


-Kerry O.

DeusImperator's photo
Sun 10/16/11 05:56 PM


what is a mensan kerry?....lol



Only that he belongs to MENSA, a society of so-called geniuses with IQs higher than 130. Like any other group, it has its overbearing, arrogant narcissists, but many of the people are really quite humble. I'd bet that Abra is another, and you know him pretty well. Abra is obviously a LOT smarter than us, 'cause you won't catch him dead in this forum, LOL!!

-Kerry O.


Top 1%ile roughly 142 and higher for your information. And who is a Mensan?

Peccy's photo
Sun 10/16/11 05:58 PM
Yes, but if you watch him parry and thrust on a topic in Religion .. it's almost fluid!

KerryO's photo
Sun 10/16/11 06:00 PM


Some truth to that, but had it not been for the moral hazard introduced by the FED's injections of liquidity (quantitative easing) and congress' long history of bailing out/propping up corporations and governments (foreign and domestic), the system wouldn't have gone out of control and collapsed like a flimsy house of cards to begin with. The worst that could have happened in a sane monetary system would be brief panics followed by recovery. (such as the Panic of 1819)


Well, you KNOW we don't often agree, but I don't think history is going to forgive Alan Greenspan for greasing the rails of this trainwreck. And to lay blame where blame is due, Clinton sure didn't shine when he signed off on the repeal of Glass-Steagall. George Bush just administered the coup de grace with his massive gift to the rich and his twin landwars financed with deficit spending.

This all set the stage for the proverbial Perfect Storm.

I suspect that no matter who gets the reins of power in the 2012 elections, not much of what they do is going to pull us out of the quicksand any faster.

But it at least they might keep us from sinking back in again.


-Kerry O.

DeusImperator's photo
Sun 10/16/11 06:25 PM

Yeah, he lost all credibility with me when he started the name-calling, personal attacks on peoples' intelligence and breaking Godwin's Law by making Hitler comparisons. He's just a Canadian Ann Coulter as far as I'm concerned-- all bluster and no facts. Not to mention disrespectful, a pretty crappy payback to we U.S. taxpayers who keep the REAL commies off his back with OUR tax money and blood while his country makes a killing on the oil that runs OUR expensive, superpower-class military.

Perhaps you are have the inability to comprehend what has been written. Know the rules in invoking the Godwin Law. The Hitler analogy was germane in the discussion owing to eugenics which was brought up. Next as to the name calling tu quoque but I did not call any one here names, did I now? Suggesting something is not the same as saying it.

Would you rather by your oil from us or from the Saudis? Really we Canadian's are pretty nice bunch. We realize that without the US our economy would tank. That is the reason we want the US to do well because then you would buy what we need to sell. See how everything works out? Besides the your larges trading partner is Canada as well.

Be nice... for a change.

Dragoness's photo
Sun 10/16/11 06:42 PM

The only real and lasting solution to the economic situation in the US is to cut corporate taxes down to at LEAST a global median level, promote business friendly policies and institute a flat (or flatter) tax and cut capital gains down to zero. Complaining that businesses are unpatriotic for relocating or moving production overseas just compounds the anti-capitalistic atmosphere detrimental to a healthy economy. Money and capital are liquid. Money and capital move to wherever it welcomed. Likewise, creating an anti-business atmosphere drives out business. I personally believe that capital gain taxes should be cut to zero as the corporation has already paid taxes on the profit earned. Any capital gain that is accrued is actually taxed twice in reality.

Next, not only deregulate industry but reduce regulations which binding corporations and businesses. Make it easier for business to relocate. Enact right to work legislation in each of the states. Repeal Obamacare and reform Medicare (which is another looming crisis looming on the horizon which is going to be an issue as the babyboomers age).

What you will see is money and capital move slowly back into the United States. We saw this same phenomena in Europe during the 1980s. As continental Europe pursued social democratic policies money moved to the UK (Thatcher) and the US (Reagan).

Next cut the public workforce by a 20% of its current level and place a hiring freeze for a 4 year period which should drop the non-military and non-essential public work force down to about 25% of its current level. Remember every public worker is a net drain on the economy because every cent comes out of the pocket of someone in the private workforce or corporations. Governments do not create jobs but can create an environment where jobs can be created by the private sector. Privatize whatever services that can be privatized without creating a monopoly. Reduce the wage rate of public workers, if they are good enough they can seek employment in the private sector. The lower public sector wages is an indication that the government should not compete detrimentally with the private sector which is the engine which creates real jobs which drive the economy.

Reduce federal unemployment benefits to 6 months and reduce welfare payments (not to save money per se) but to reduce dependence on government largess (meaning other people's money) and vote buying.

However, due to ideological reasons and loud mouthed special interest groups (squeaky wheel getting the grease) there is little political motivation to institute such reforms.




Nice opinion but not a viable solution. Still believing the piss down economics works when it has been shown not to and still taking it out on the poor.

Shame.

DeusImperator's photo
Sun 10/16/11 08:17 PM

Nice opinion but not a viable solution. Still believing the piss down economics works when it has been shown not to and still taking it out on the poor.

Shame.


???

So having good money being paid out to the "poor" like we have been doing is a viable solution? We have been doing that on the micro and macro scales and it has shown not to work. So the solution from the left is "give them more money" so fork over more money to the poor and there are still "poor" around. So what is the left's solution once this has not worked? "You have not tried giving them even more money". Yes this song and dance has been going around for ages nationally and internationally and always the left is so willing to relieve the productive of their labor while squandering it on the ne'er-do-wells usually to buy their vote. Well it is time to cut the umbilical cord and leave the parasites to their own accord. Sooner or later hunger or greed will drive them to choose more more productive avenues of income and the productive will be all the better for it.

The fact is the poor will always remain with us. The definition what is poverty will forever change. There will always be poor among us. But in a capitalist state that is usually a temporary state which many of us may experience. If we define poor by median income there will always be people below the medium income level. If we define poverty as being the bottom 1%, 2%, 10% what have you there will be someone in that category. If you define poverty by what someone owns or has access to in a home (well that seem to be a new trend), such as owning a Playstation, wide-screen TV, having a cell phone, having high speed internet, a home, a car or what ever else that could be thought of to qualify one to be "poor" there will be people who would qualify for these but these would not necessarily be poor. As I said there will always be a bottom 10% (or what ever number can be dreamt of). So the left will always have someone to claim as a victim of whatever oppression is in vogue at the time.

The only way to create sustained wealth is to allow the free market to make choices. As I have stated cut spending, reduce the public workforce, enact right to work legislation, cut welfare, repeal Obamacare, cut and flatten taxes, cut salaries of the public servants, cut federal benefits etc. Such a policy would make more money available for investment and job creation. If you claim that capitalists are greedy, do you think capitalists would keep money in banks??? No they invest, start business or make existing business even bigger or invest in infrastructure. A free unfettered market is an excellent at figuring as to what is required and where thus the market will decide as to where resources and capital is required.

DeusImperator's photo
Sun 10/16/11 08:35 PM
A better site regarding capital gains (site not run by a weed smoking hippie)

http://www.accf.org/publications/102/the-case-for-a-broad-based-capital-gains-tax-cut

http://dreier.house.gov/pdf/IPI%20-%20CapGainsKey.pdf

From elsewhere in the world
http://finance.indiamart.com/taxation/facts_capitalgains.html

heavenlyboy34's photo
Sun 10/16/11 09:17 PM

A better site regarding capital gains (site not run by a weed smoking hippie)

http://www.accf.org/publications/102/the-case-for-a-broad-based-capital-gains-tax-cut

http://dreier.house.gov/pdf/IPI%20-%20CapGainsKey.pdf

From elsewhere in the world
http://finance.indiamart.com/taxation/facts_capitalgains.html

Hey! Almost all the dope smoking hippies I know are extremely bright and rational. (Steve Jobs happened to be a dope smoking hippie too smokin )

no photo
Sun 10/16/11 09:42 PM
WOW,,I never really thought about people and views and words that LEAD others to follow,,,COMING FROM A SINGLE SITE,,,but to be real,,HEY,,we all gotta eat,,,SO..
Maybe OUR world NOW HAS PEOPLE,,planted or seeded into Net Work sites to HELP spread their Philosophies, lies and BS,,in hopes of MAKING other TURN from how they feel,,damn it boys,,,,
LIFE is beginning to stink anymore...
IF I was wanting to MAKE IDEAS and GET OUT TO PEOPLE EVERYWHERE,
What would 100 bucks a day for a telemarketer,,teleNETER,,lol,,have to do except,,join sites,,,and preach their pitch to whoever would listen,,,,The home bound person MAKES money,,and the backers get their VOICE out,,,,,Pretty cool,,yet,,,pretty damn scary...
Just saying?

msharmony's photo
Sun 10/16/11 09:55 PM
site ran by and information provided by are not the same thing

the information from the link originates from Paul Krugman,, as the New York Times explains:

Mr. Krugman received his B.A. from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1977. He has taught at Yale, MIT and Stanford. At MIT he became the Ford International Professor of Economics.



Mr Krugman also won the Nobel Prize for economics in October 2008

DeusImperator's photo
Mon 10/17/11 04:56 AM
Edited by DeusImperator on Mon 10/17/11 04:57 AM

site ran by and information provided by are not the same thing

the information from the link originates from Paul Krugman,, as the New York Times explains:

Mr. Krugman received his B.A. from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1977. He has taught at Yale, MIT and Stanford. At MIT he became the Ford International Professor of Economics.



Mr Krugman also won the Nobel Prize for economics in October 2008


Perhaps an inability to read an article for what it is worth seems to be an acute symptom some suffer from ... The article is not by Paul Krugman as you would have us believe. Steve Kanga wrote that article. Steve Kanga's education level? Oh yes Russian Studies and even that was not complete!!! Attempting to clothe an article in an aura of authority by quoting persons out of context and attributing it to another is similar to what Mohamed did to allah. Throwing words into an idol's mouth and then claiming allah said it so it must be true.

Conversation from the Sahih Bukahari the most authentic source of ahadith:

Mohamed: Allah revealed that I am to wed your daughter.
Ali: But we are brothers
Mohamed: We are not brothers of blood but brothers in faith. Allah sent the heavenly cranes of supplication and when their gift was uncovered I saw a babe, your daughter. It is allah's will
So Mohamed married Ayisha when she was six. And there are still 1 billion (and growing) followers of Islam all hoodwinked by a third rate ventriloquist and his sock puppet.

no photo
Mon 10/17/11 05:46 AM







It’s really sad to me that a Canadian knows more about American economy and politics than most Americas. BTW...that is not a slight to anyone debating our Canadian friend in this thread, but was aimed at American citizens in general.

That being said, I’m not here to engage in the debate going on here, but just to make a general comment on the topic of the relation of jobs and Obamacare.

I’m in the same boat as most middle class, small business owners right now…maybe more so because I’m engaged in a business that is not as necessary as other services these days. Everyone on my staff has taken pay cuts over the last couple of years to ensure that none of our workers jobs are cut.

We already pay as much as $40 in liability and workman’s comp insurance per $100 in salary on our workforce. My accountant and I have crunched the numbers 20 different ways, but the bottom line of each spells the same failure…if I have to provide health insurance or pay fines for being unable, there will be 31 more people looking for jobs…32 including myself. I am not independently wealthy, so there is not a thing I'll be able to do about it.

As far as I can see, Herman Cain is the only one really giving much attention to the issues facing small businesses. People seem to forget that small businesses are an important part of our economy and could be a ready resource toward the creation of jobs. Forget about us and we will simply be swallowed up or fade away.





thats the divide in american politics, there are 'groups' which all feel a candidate represents them,, but few candidates represent all groups

I have a friend who is a business oner and he would disagree that health insurance causes him any problem whatsoever

I also dont see any 'small business' connections to herman cain

or evidence that our canadian friend is so terribly informed about the american economy or politics


I'm not promoting Herman Cain, I only said that there is only one I've heard address the issues with small businesses and how important they are in our ecomony...it just happened to be Herman Cain. This is how little small businesses are being thought of in this economy or as having a role in possible solutions.

If you are interested in seeing a video of what Herman Cain has to say about small businesses, I can try to find it...but like I said...not promoting him and don't necessarily believe he has any real answers.

Your friend is obviously in a business where he is not mandated to pay $40 on the $100 for insurance already. And he is probably not in the only business catagory that is going to be required to carry health insurance for as few as 5 employees.

For someone who hates big corporations so much due to their greed, an oportunistic ways,I'm a little surprised you are not a little more sympathetic to the smaller businesses who are not driven by greed, and care individually about their employees. I'm surprised to get such a cool reply from you of all people.





I dont hate corporation, I do hate greed and opportunism

I am sympathetic to small business, I just dont necessarily believe healthcare reform will cause them such hardship


So which part don't you believe...that there are labor contractors who already have to pay $40 on the $100 in mandated insurance already, or that labor contractors are going to be required to carry health insurance on 5 employees or more.

Or is it that you don't believe that the combination of the two will can put a business out of business?



the part where either of those things stem from healthcare reform


That would be the part where Obamacare targets the ONLY industry that already has the heaviest insurance mandate burden with a 5 employee requirement for healthcare coverage instead of the 50 employee requirement imposed on ALL other industries.

Ours is an industry where 5% profit is typical, due to the current insurance mandates imposed on us. Unless insurance premiums go down drastically, healthcare coverage for my 31 employees will cost me 6%-8% of company profit….that’s 1%-3% more than we have the ability to cover....even if I don't make a dime myself.

The typical response to this is..."You will simply have to raise our prices"...basic business 101…right? I'll go ahead and cover this as you don't know the inner workings of our industry...so here is how it really works: The larger corporations in this industry will not raise prices because they have the leverage to absorb the added cost through backroom deals with the suppliers who can’t afford to lose their business. Mid-sized to smaller companies do not have that pull, so will not be able to raise thier prices and remain competative.

This formula spells disaster for small to middle-sized companies in the labor industry….and though it is not solely due to Obamacare, as the bloodsucking 40% payroll insurance mandates were already a hardship….but the added Obamacare mandates are the final backbreakers.


DeusImperator's photo
Mon 10/17/11 05:57 AM

Hey! Almost all the dope smoking hippies I know are extremely bright and rational. (Steve Jobs happened to be a dope smoking hippie too smokin )


Point taken, in an nod to Steve Job.
Requiem aeternam dona is Domine et lux perpetua luceat is. Requiescat in pace.



metalwing's photo
Mon 10/17/11 08:09 AM

The only real and lasting solution to the economic situation in the US is to cut corporate taxes down to at LEAST a global median level, promote business friendly policies and institute a flat (or flatter) tax and cut capital gains down to zero. Complaining that businesses are unpatriotic for relocating or moving production overseas just compounds the anti-capitalistic atmosphere detrimental to a healthy economy. Money and capital are liquid. Money and capital move to wherever it welcomed. Likewise, creating an anti-business atmosphere drives out business. I personally believe that capital gain taxes should be cut to zero as the corporation has already paid taxes on the profit earned. Any capital gain that is accrued is actually taxed twice in reality.

Next, not only deregulate industry but reduce regulations which binding corporations and businesses. Make it easier for business to relocate. Enact right to work legislation in each of the states. Repeal Obamacare and reform Medicare (which is another looming crisis looming on the horizon which is going to be an issue as the babyboomers age).

What you will see is money and capital move slowly back into the United States. We saw this same phenomena in Europe during the 1980s. As continental Europe pursued social democratic policies money moved to the UK (Thatcher) and the US (Reagan).

Next cut the public workforce by a 20% of its current level and place a hiring freeze for a 4 year period which should drop the non-military and non-essential public work force down to about 25% of its current level. Remember every public worker is a net drain on the economy because every cent comes out of the pocket of someone in the private workforce or corporations. Governments do not create jobs but can create an environment where jobs can be created by the private sector. Privatize whatever services that can be privatized without creating a monopoly. Reduce the wage rate of public workers, if they are good enough they can seek employment in the private sector. The lower public sector wages is an indication that the government should not compete detrimentally with the private sector which is the engine which creates real jobs which drive the economy.

Reduce federal unemployment benefits to 6 months and reduce welfare payments (not to save money per se) but to reduce dependence on government largess (meaning other people's money) and vote buying.

However, due to ideological reasons and loud mouthed special interest groups (squeaky wheel getting the grease) there is little political motivation to institute such reforms.




Very astute.

msharmony's photo
Mon 10/17/11 09:04 AM


site ran by and information provided by are not the same thing

the information from the link originates from Paul Krugman,, as the New York Times explains:

Mr. Krugman received his B.A. from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1977. He has taught at Yale, MIT and Stanford. At MIT he became the Ford International Professor of Economics.



Mr Krugman also won the Nobel Prize for economics in October 2008


Perhaps an inability to read an article for what it is worth seems to be an acute symptom some suffer from ... The article is not by Paul Krugman as you would have us believe. Steve Kanga wrote that article. Steve Kanga's education level? Oh yes Russian Studies and even that was not complete!!! Attempting to clothe an article in an aura of authority by quoting persons out of context and attributing it to another is similar to what Mohamed did to allah. Throwing words into an idol's mouth and then claiming allah said it so it must be true.

Conversation from the Sahih Bukahari the most authentic source of ahadith:

Mohamed: Allah revealed that I am to wed your daughter.
Ali: But we are brothers
Mohamed: We are not brothers of blood but brothers in faith. Allah sent the heavenly cranes of supplication and when their gift was uncovered I saw a babe, your daughter. It is allah's will
So Mohamed married Ayisha when she was six. And there are still 1 billion (and growing) followers of Islam all hoodwinked by a third rate ventriloquist and his sock puppet.



I wouldnt have anyone believe anything. I admit though that I often speak on a college educated level so I believe in peoples ability to seperate 'opinion' from 'information'. The reference to the information in the piece is absolutely credited to Klugman, as well as the Bureau of economic analysis and Robert S McIntyre.

Hopefully, those with college education understand the significance of references in any written piece and can distinguish such referenced material from the writers interpretations and opinions.

There is, as in most writing, the presence of both.